Jed Jacobsohn/GettyRaiders linebacker Kirk Morrison says he has spoken with a few teams but won't name which ones, nor divulge the Giants' interest in him.7:18 p.m. UPDATED with full Jim Sorgi contract details down below.

The Giants addressed their top need in free agency by signing safety Antrel Rolle. Now, there's only one glaring hole on their defense that's yet to be filled: middle linebacker.

One of the candidates to plug that gap is Raiders linebacker Kirk Morrison, a restricted free agent who appears obtainable because of a low tender that would net Oakland only a third-round pick if another team lures him away.

Morrison was a guest of Adam Schein and Solomon Wilcots today on "The Sirius Blitz" on Sirius NFL Radio. When pressed by Schein on whether the Giants are pursuing him, Morrison wouldn't bite, though he did say there are a few teams who are interested in his services.

"I'm technically an Oakland Raider still. That's No. 1," Morrison said. "But at the same time, you have to explore your options for the future, for the long term. There are some teams out there that would be a good fit, I feel like. But we just have to wait and see."

Morrison declined to name those teams right now. I'd have a hard time believing the Giants wouldn't be one of them. I'd think they would have at least had preliminary discussions with Morrison's agent, Bruce Tollner, who said earlier Thursday there's nothing to report.

"There are some teams we're looking at and we've talked to," Morrison said. "Hopefully, in the next couple of weeks we can get something done ... either with the Raiders or with other teams. I know next year I'm going to be playing football. I just want to make sure I'm in the best, most comfortable position I can be in."

Morrison, 28, is scheduled to earn $2.521 million if he signs his tender and remains with the Raiders this season. Morrison said he wasn't surprised he received such a low tender nor did he seem to hold any ill will toward the Raiders.

Not even for the 20-60 record they've compiled during his tenure in Oakland.

"The biggest thing is I just want to go out and win," Morrison said when asked what he'd be looking for in a a new team, should he decide to go that route. "Get into a situation that puts you in the best opportunity to win football games. Being in this league for five years already and losing more games than you win week in and week out, it's hard to play at the kind of level that you want to being on the losing end. But you never give up your effort, you never give up who you are as a football player.

"That's something that you look at. You look at the leadership roles around the league with other teams and you just want to find a place you can fit and say, 'Hey, I'll come in, do my job and do whatever I can to help this team win.' ... You definitely want to be able to get paid, but I think in the end you want to get what you deserve. And I feel like I'm very deserving of that. I just want to find a place where everything is going to be okay."

I don't have the exact details of the LTBE bonuses, but since they're deemed "likely to be earned" that probably means they're similar to what he accomplished over his six years with the Colts, which means very little playing time.

Add up all those numbers and you get $1.1525 million. Again, I'm told he has incentives that can make the deal worth up to $1.8 million should he be needed to play a lot in place of an injured Eli Manning.

Bottom line: it cost the Giants $225k (the signing bonus plus the workout bonus) to carry Sorgi into camp. If Rhett Bomar beats him out, that'll be the final cost for signing Sorgi.